It seems Smith made the right decisions when he hired Mike Nolan as defensive coordinator and Dirk Koetter to run the offense.

“In my mind we have the best coaching staff in the NFL,” Smith said.

How long he can keep it together is unclear.

The Falcons’ success this season helped Koetter earn a head-coaching interview last week with Kansas City. Nolan, the former head coach in San Francisco, interviewed for the same job with Philadelphia.

And Keith Armstrong, the Falcons’ special teams coordinator since Smith put his first Atlanta staff together in 2008, interviewed for head-coaching vacancies with Kansas City, Philadelphia and Chicago.

Koetter withdrew his name from consideration after signing a new contract with the Falcons through 2014. Nolan and Armstrong both sidestepped Tuesday night whether they hope to meet again with other teams after Atlanta’s season ends.

They could be available to do so as early as next week if the Falcons (13-3) lose Sunday at home to Seattle (12-5) in the second round of the playoffs.

“Hopefully we’re still playing,” Nolan said.

Though it’s not Smith’s style to say so publicly, the Falcons were considered a team that had gone soft and predictable offensively and defensively after last year’s 24-2 playoff loss at the New York Giants.

So perhaps Jacksonville did Smith a favor when it hired Koetter’s predecessor, Mike Mularkey, as head coach. Auburn did the same by hiring Brian VanGorder as defensive coordinator.

Atlanta earned the NFC’s No. 1 playoff seed for the second time in three years, thanks in part to Koetter helping quarterback Matt Ryan enjoy a career-best season, and Nolan putting his players in position to earn 31 takeaways.

But Nolan and Koetter both caution that the Falcons will face their toughest opponent this season when Seattle visits the Georgia Dome.

While the Seahawks are coming off a dominant victory at Washington last week in a wild-card game, Nolan hopes to disguise coverages well enough to force rookie quarterback Russell Wilson into making mistakes.

That has hardly been the case this year for Wilson, who is ranked No. 4 in NFL passer rating and is the Seahawks’ second-leading rusher behind star running back Marshawn Lynch.

Nolan considers the elusive Wilson a dangerous scrambler because he usually doesn’t extend plays to run for yardage as much as he keeps his eyes downfield to find an open receiver.

“You have to keep covering guys for a long time on the back end,” Nolan said. “That’s hard to do. That’s one of the tougher things about him because when he’s running around, you’d better stay with your man.”

Koetter’s job will be to design a game plan that improves the pass protection of Ryan and helps Roddy White, Julio Jones and Tony Gonzalez create separation from the defense.

The Falcons caught a break after defensive end Chris Clemons, Seattle’s leader with 11½ sacks, was lost for the season at Washington because of a knee injury. But the Seahawks didn’t rank No. 1 in scoring defense this year because they relied solely on one player.

In the regular season, Richard Sherman had eight interceptions, and Bruce Irvin had eight sacks for a defense that ranked fourth overall and tied Atlanta with 31 takeaways.

But the Falcons were seventh in scoring, sixth in passing, second in third-down efficiency and seventh in scoring.

Koetter likes how Atlanta matches up against Seattle in the red zone.

“I might be in the minority, but I look at it as strength on strength,” Koetter said. “Heck, let’s go. They’ve got a good defense, and we have a good offense. I know their team is running hot right now, and I know our guys are looking forward to the challenge.”

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